Print Inrit 5 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, branding, packaging, vintage, theatrical, gothic, storybook, rustic, handmade texture, period mood, display impact, rough charm, blackletter-tinged, chiseled, rough-edged, inked, irregular.
A bold, high-contrast display face with hand-drawn, carved-looking contours and noticeably irregular outlines. Strokes swell and taper abruptly, creating faceted edges and wedge-like terminals that feel more cut than smoothly penned. Counters are often tight and angular, with occasional pinched or distorted bowls that emphasize a rough, handmade texture. Proportions vary across letters, and the rhythm is intentionally uneven, producing a lively, slightly chaotic silhouette in both uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, headlines, title treatments, book or album covers, and brand marks that want a vintage or gothic-leaning edge. It also works well for packaging and labels where texture and personality matter more than long-form readability.
The overall tone is dramatic and old-world, with a blackletter-adjacent flavor that reads as theatrical and a bit ominous. Its rugged texture and jagged terminals add a rustic, folklore energy—more haunted storybook or medieval tavern sign than refined editorial typography.
The design appears intended to mimic handmade, cut or inked letterforms with a deliberately weathered finish, combining historical display cues with an expressive, informal irregularity. It prioritizes character, texture, and strong silhouettes for attention-grabbing typography.
Uppercase forms lean toward sharp, emblematic shapes with strong silhouettes, while lowercase maintains the same chiseled texture but with simpler, sturdier construction. Numerals are equally stylized and irregular, with distinctive, rough inner contours that can become a defining visual motif at larger sizes.